Ammann's move shifts GM leadership dynamic

DETROIT — General Motors President Dan Ammann stepping down to lead the company's Cruise autonomous vehicle unit ushers in a new era for the automaker's leadership team.

Ammann, who will become CEO of GM Cruise on Jan. 1, has been part of GM CEO Mary Barra's inner circle, alongside product chief Mark Reuss, since she took charge of the automaker in January 2014. CFO Chuck Stevens rounded out the group until retiring three months ago.

The four well-respected executives were each known for bringing different expertise to the table, with Ammann, a former Wall Street banker, being the driver behind GM exiting underperforming markets and shifting the automaker's focus to autonomous and electrified vehicles.

While Ammann, 46, will still work with the leadership team, his responsibilities as president will be divided between Barra and Dhivya Suryadevara, the fast-rising executive who succeeded Stevens as CFO.

"It shows the importance they are placing on these technologies," said David Kudla, chief investment strategist at Mainstay Capital Management, "and how serious they are about the Cruise division to put a person like that in charge."

Ammann will indirectly continue to report to Barra, who chairs the GM Cruise board of directors.

Cruise's current CEO and co-founder, Kyle Vogt, will become president and chief technology officer of the operations.

Ammann on Thursday, Nov. 29, described he and Vogt, 33, as "partners," with Vogt leading the technical side of the business and Ammann focusing on "commercialization and other scaling from a corporate point of view."

Ammann, who will be based in San Francisco, declined to comment directly on the possibility of those actions.

"All the energy right now is focused on getting to the point of initial commercial deployment," Ammann told Automotive News, later adding that the company could be "open-minded to other opportunities down the road," including additional outside investors.

David Whiston, an analyst with Morningstar, said naming Ammann as CEO for Cruise makes sense to do now if GM is planning a separation and gives Cruise an immediate credibility boost on Wall Street.

"It'll give Dan some time to not only focus on Cruise full time, to become integrated into Cruise," he said, "and if they spin off, he can do an investor road show fully from the Cruise perspective."

'Sweet spot'

GM acquired San Francisco-based Cruise Automation for $581 million, including $330 million cash, in 2016. Ammann has since overseen its expansion from 40 employees to more than 1,000. The subsidiary is valued at $14.6 billion following recent investments.

Vogt said the move was under discussion for more than a year, and that the timing was right as Cruise approaches commercial launch of a public self-driving ride-hailing fleet in 2019.

"To me, it's sort of the sweet spot where the skills that Dan has will really complement what we have on our leadership team today and take it to the next level," Vogt said.